Gov. Scott Walker said Friday that he won’t back away from key allies amid a continuing secret John Doe investigation.

Walker also expressed surprise with a recent Wall Street Journal editorial that criticized alleged settlement talks between the Walker campaign and special prosecutor Francis Schmitz.

“I’m certainly not going to undermine people who share my same beliefs and I’m certainly not going to undermine anyone’s First Amendment rights. I’m frankly kind of shocked for anyone to suggest that,” Walker said after delivering a keynote address at Hope Christian High School senior signing day….

Walker also touted his record “as strong economic and fiscal conservative,” policy positions that align with the Wisconsin Club for Growth.

“I’ve been tested on that,” he said. “I’ve been pushed on that. I haven’t backed away from from keeping that commitment to the people of this state. I think there is no evidence that would otherwise suggest in any way I would back away from not only that position but from supporting people who support the same position.”

Comments

I’m liking this Gov Walker guy so far!
The public-employee membership in WI is starting to recede, a good think in my view. Once you remove Dem operatives from the public teat, you can being to reduce them to a manageable size.

fwiw, the thing thrown out by leftie trolls is that he is apparently a mere high school graduate. Not a problem in my view, but that is some of spam that will get thrown his way in the coming months.

First, Walker issued a “carefully worded statement”; a “Carefully worded” statement is code for “dude, we were in the process of selling you out but you caught us in the act!”

If this weren’t the case, a simple yes or no would have sufficed to make his position loud and clear. Having dimmed his luster a bit, Walker now has to make a statement that makes it seem like he’s backtracking.

Walker remains on my short list for 2016. He’s demonstrated much of what I’m looking for: fiscal conservatism, willingness to tangle with the opposition, willingness to take major political risks to win, and more than that willingness, he’s shown he can actually deliver, even in a deep blue state like Wisconsin. He took a deficit, turned it into a surplus, then gave the taxpayers their money back via tax cuts. He has slit the achilles tendons of public unions, assuring ongoing fiscal health. He’s been more thoroughly vetted than many presidential candidates ever are and is clean.

If hypereducated blokes are supposed to be automatically qualified for the Chief Executive job, the acts of the Obama regime have just conclusively demonstrated the fallacy of that canard.

And don’t put Woodrow Wilson, President of Princeton, up on any pedestals either. His DOJ created its own civilian army, the American Protective League, a gang of 250,000 badged, ununiformed civilian vigilantes charged with spying on their neighbors, suppressing ‘wrong’ statements and opinions, and cracking heads to enforce the ‘patriotic’ point of view mandated by his Administration. Senator McCarthy was a piker by comparison with this mighty gang.

By comparison, Governor Walker’s high school degree, combined with his actual governance of a state, appear to be far better credentials for a presidential candidate than Obama’s law degree and Wilson’s PhD.

I don’t understand the whole premise of the story. Suppose Walker wanted to sell his allies out, how could he do so? What kind of deal could he make that would pull the rug from under them? Any deal he makes will not be binding on them. He has no authority to withdraw O’Keefe’s lawsuit against the prosecutors. So what is anyone afraid of?